"Doctor" or "Doctored"? The Word Mix-Up That Should Have Every American Asking Questions.
Let's recap this week's spectacle: Trump posts an AI-generated image of himself in white robes, glowing hands, healing a sick man — straight out of a Renaissance painting of Jesus — right in the middle of his beef with Pope Leo XIV. Backlash erupts. Even MAGA conservatives are horrified. He deletes it.
Then Monday, standing in front of the press, Trump says — and I quote — "I thought it was me as a doctor. It had to do with the Red Cross."
Today? Karoline Leavitt tells the press the image was "doctored."
Doctor. Doctored. One letter away from a completely different sentence.
Now, two possibilities here, and neither one is reassuring:

Option A: Someone told Trump to say the image was doctored — meaning manipulated — and he heard doctor and ran with it. If he can't follow basic communication from his own staff, what does that say about the man with his finger near the nuclear button?

Option B: He knew exactly what that image was and lied to reporters' faces — and his press secretary is now trying to clean it up with a different lie.
Either way, this is EXACTLY what AI was feared to become — a tool to generate, manipulate, and launder propaganda at scale. And the variations circulating online — some with Epstein's face photoshopped in as the man Trump is "healing" — show just how fast AI imagery spins out of control once it's out there.
This isn't a gaffe. This isn't a joke. A man who posted himself as Jesus, attacked the actual Pope, then couldn't coherently explain what he posted to a group of reporters — that man is the President of the United States.
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